tv Americas Newsroom FOX News November 21, 2022 7:00am-8:00am PST
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most cost effective flights. it is a little different and tougher this year. >> usually before it was like 200 something now it's like 600, 700, $800. >> if you are looking to save some money on travel, either later this year or next year, hopper says the best time to buy is the tuesday after thanksgiving. you can save as much as $3 hundred on your trips. >> bill: we should delay the turkey. nice to see you live in chicago at o'hare. grady trimble. thank you. >> dana: what have you heard from people in the community about their concerns? >> initially they got a message from law enforcement that this community was secure and safe. but then law enforcement had to walk that back, which has made this community very unnerved and you can understand why. >> dana: former homicide detective ted williams on the gruesome murder of four university of idaho students
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stabbed to death in their home eight days ago. 90 interviews and many types and no leads. mounting questions in the investigation and few answers. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. good morning to you. >> bill: good morning. i'm bill hemmer. good morning at home. a haunting photo taken hours before the murders. kaylee goncalves shared this photo surrounded by other three victims writing one lucky girl to be surrounded by these people. ethan chap-in and shane yeah arrived at a party. kaylee and madison hanging out at a sports bar in town. the pair is seen in video at 1:41 a.m. near a food truck in a clip posted online at a platform that streams images there. kaylee, madison, ethan and shana
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are back at home. >> dana: the four victims were stabbed to death between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. the other two roommates survived. a phone call was made from the phone of one of the roommates but not clear who made the call. lawrence jones host of cross-country. you had a chance to talk with the parents of kaylee and here is what her dad was saying and what they've learned about the investigation. listen here. >> they are telling us there is so much evidence it will take a lot of time to process it all. this wasn't like a pinpoint crime. this person was sloppy. he made a mess and there is a mess there and they will have to go through that point by point on it will take a lot of time and why they reached out to other facilities to help them with that lab work. >> dana: a grieving father to
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called in to be on your show saturday night. >> the father and mother were there. i was very impressed how calm they were in the midst of their grief. they continue to say they believe we can catch the guy if people can fill in the missing pieces. what they've asked us to do is if you feel like you fit somewhere in that timeline whether you think it is minor or not, just call the police. if you have ring doorbell cameras, call the police and give them that information so they can fill in the missing pieces there. we were talking off air, i'm of the theory because it has been since 2015, it may be problematic the way that they are conducting the investigation from the standpoint of like i said on saturday night, when i'm off air for two weeks i'm a little rusty. they have resources such as the state police, they have the bau
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unit to come in to try to find the profile but when you have kids going in and out and, you know, as a criminal justice major the one thing that i remember is my professor slapping me with points off a test when we messed up a crime scene. it is easy to do that. law enforcement do that. it's part of the game. but as paul has noted you can take the dna away but when you have kids going in. i see them a week later just now doing tire compressions, my brain starts to circle. >> bill: very interesting. paul we're told the community must be prepared for a lengthy investigation. i don't know if you agree with that or not. how do you see it from the outside right now. >> as lawrence said there will be a ton of evidence coming back. one of the things people may be overlooking is a digital forensics going on here. college kids operate on their phones, right? so we're all used to the csi
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effect. blood, fingerprints, footprints, tire tracks. one of the other things will be pulling the logs from the wifi in the house, pulling the texts from all the phones. going into the social media accounts. seeing if you can get into the phones. these days the phones are encrypted. it can be another route you have to go. one of the reasons why this is going to be so difficult and time consuming. doesn't mean they won't get there. they will get there. it is my belief they'll get there and maybe sooner than some people are postulating but it takes a lot of sweat work. >> dana: it's thanksgiving break week so it is possible that whoever was involved is no longer even in idaho. >> which is really a detriment to the investigation. one of the things you do is go outside the circle of trust and you have the house where these folks live and you want to interview people with access to the house and people close to the family and people who live and see them all the time.
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it gets into somebody's head. if everybody was left town, you are limited in who you can get to quickly. i don't like to speculate too much but to commit a crime like this with the kind of knife they are talking about, which i believe they have nailed it down. i don't mean they have the actual weapon but when they it's the kind of knife they say it is i think they have it from the m.e. it will lead to a messy situation. i believe there is a good chance take perp has cuts on his hands, something like that. so he has left town and i'm saying he, it could be more than one. but in the normal circumstance you may be looking for somebody answering the door like this when he talks to the police and walking around in school with gloves on. those kinds of things are off the table now because the kids are scattered to the four winds. >> bill: to be clear you think they have the killer's weapon? >> no, they've identified the
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type of weapon, not the actual weapon. >> if you listen to the medical examiner they talk about the defensive wounds paul was noting. the one critical piece and if you look at the press conference they were evasive when it came to the question of do you know what the person they may have been targeting? the reason why i say that is when we see this in cases before, the person that has the most wounds could have been the target and could have been trying to keep the other people senility. if there is a nexus between that person and you start to shadow really zone if on that key victim and seeing who was in that orbit. it could have been just one person that they were after and then silenced the other people. obviously this is speculation. it was very clear that there was one target or it could have been multiple targets based on the press conference. they didn't want to go into more detail with that question.
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>> strange the other two roommates don't wake up and what do they know? >> dana: a quick response if you have it, paul. does the community need to be worried? >> you can never say absolutely. i admire the fact they manned up and walked back their initial statements. i know they had said well, there is no need to panic. i think that's what they wanted to avoid is a panic. the killings had occurred a number of hours earlier. it wasn't an imminent threat. it took a lot for them to come out and stay we're wrong. we do have to be wary. you can't say no. >> it came from the public. the cross-country team has been there for a week. people don't want to talk on air afraid they'll be the next target. >> bill: i thought there was a lot of calm shown by the parents on your program saturday night. thanks to you both. want to get to this now. two viruses on the rise in the wake of covid called rsv and the flu causing a new health crisis.
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overwhelming children's hospitals. mark meredith with more on how the administration hopes to deal with this. good morning. >> good morning to you. ever since he took office president biden spent a lot of time and energy talking about coronavirus. now the white house is facing a grow amount of questions about how it will handle the increase in cases of something known as rsv, which is impacting young children nationwide. the american of pediatrics many places don't have the staff and resources to cover the infants struggling to breathe. we need flexibility along the same lines of what was provided responding to covid surges. the white house is letting the
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department of health and human services take the lead and it is also providing assistance to communities on a case-by-case basis. the white house is still urging americans not necessarily because of rsv but other illnesses flu to make sure they get flu shots and vaccines because of winter illnesses. for parents the struggle is real. some parents are sending students to school too quickly. parents can't take more time off work and weariness with dealing with so much illness during covid-19. the parents don't want to miss work and want their kids to make up for lost instruction. for parents trying to get their kids better they are having trouble getting the medicine they need. an amoxicillin shortage. my wife had to go to three different pharmacies to find the medicine. >> dana: let's get more on this from dr. marc siegel, a fox news
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contributor. three basic questions, what are the symptoms we should be looking for? >> by the way, that's the most important question, dana. they're different, right? so i will put my neck out and say this. if it's covid, i am seeing with this sub variant a lot of really severe sore throats to start off and headaches. if it's flu you are walking along and hit like a ton of bricks and feel fatigued and laid out. a sudden thing. we used to call it the grip. body and muscle aches and fatigue and fever. if it's rsv we're talking about respiratory congestion. you are clogged. if you're a young child under the age of six months you can't afford to be clogged up. you can't breathe and why we're seeing all the hospitalizations from rsv. it is a big problem and all three are happening at once. the most important thing is i can tell the difference. i can do a rapid test for covid
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and in a hospital e.r. i can test for rsv and a rapid flu test we can use. when mark meredith says he can't find a mmoxiamoxicillin, i want caution that a lot of pediatricians overprescribe it. we don't use it for viruses. that has to be for strep or bacteria. >> dana: who is most at risk. at what point and severity to you take your child to the doctor or hospital? >> another excellent question. most at risk is the child under the age of six months. the infants for the reasons i said. they have very small airways. what you want to look for is a change in behavior. they are not as responsive. maybe their fingertips are turning blue and having trouble breathing is when you take them to the emergency room for what i suspect is rsv. flu i'm looking for high fever
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and a change in behavior. covid we've been through this routine. i don't want covid patients in the e.r. unless they're really sick and having trouble breathing. >> dana: dr. marc siegel. important information for our virus. a lot of people will gathering with family this weekend. stay close and we'll watch for anything else you do at foxnews.com as well for updates. thank you so much. >> get your flu shot and get your covid shot. >> drop the gun, drop the gun. >> bill: awful stuff. police involved shooting in upstate new york. what happened in the moments just before shots rang out. >> dana: republicans plan to investigate hunter's overseas business deals. >> bill: world cup soccer fans fill outside stadiums in qatar. they had to get riot police to
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>> dana: the fifa world cup kicked off this weekend. thousands of fans pushed against police lines to get in. what's going on over there? we have more as things get underway. >> the world cup is officially kicked off and the u.s. will have its first match today. it will begin at 2:00 p.m.enter you can watch all of it on fox sports and the live coverage begins at 1:00 p.m.enter earlier today we visited the military vase for the opening of the fox sports
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sky bar. murdoch thanks service members and women and attended the ribbon cutting. it's to unwind and relax. 8,000 u.s. service members are stationed in qatar. >> it's the second time i've been here in a year. it feels like i've been here much more often. i feel a connection with the air base. deeper and more significant, only two visits. >> as the world cup kicked off last night during the first world cup match things took a dangerous turn. 80,000 people made their way to the fan festty call. the watching area was only built for half that capacity. riot police showed up and fans were shoved and corraled into pens. parents tried protecting their kids from this potentially very dangerous crowd surge.
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back here tonight as more matches kick off during the beginning of the game between iran and england, the iranian players did not sing their national anthem in what is believed to be a stand of solidarity with the protestors back home. the u.s. will play iran next week. >> dana: thank you so much. the first world cup i remember really watching was in 1998. i had just moved to england. met peter on the airplane and moved to england. i watched every game. uzbekistan, you name it, i watched it all. >> bill: the americans play this afternoon. the iranian deal don't overlook that. that camera pans on the face of every player on the field. no one is singing a single note. >> dana: it will be noted in iran that's for sure. >> bill: there is this, too. check it out. >> there is no question that joe
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biden was receiving benefit from hunter biden. hunter biden's only source of income when our adversaries in china and russia. this is concerning. the american people deserve answers. >> bill: you will hear a lot from james comer from southwest kentucky. house republicans say they'll make hunter biden's business dealings a top priority but the media keeps shrugging it off. turley writes this. what elephant denies there is any evidence that biden discussed hunter's business dealings and cite the emails that seem to indicate otherwise. marc thiessen, former speech writer to president george w. bush. good morning. i want to get the exact quote here that says over the weekend there was a claim in the a.p. no evidence to suggest that biden ever spoke to his son hunter about his foreign business dealings. that was the impetus for what turley wrote about. does turley have a point? let's beginning there. >> 100%.
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the media cover-up has been shameless. they told us the hunter biden laptop was russian disinformation. biden said during his presidential debate it was a russian plant. that was a complete and total lie. it was not true. we know there has been forensic investigation it is legitimate and be lookinged to hunter biden. for the a.p. to say there is no evidence that joe biden ever talked to hunter biden about his private business dealings, that's also false. we have emails, photographs of joe biden with hunter biden's clients. we have voice mails of him leaving messages saying hey, buddy, i saw the story. let's talk about it. it is a complete and utter lie and they continue to deny it and push it down. >> bill: here is exact quote. written by the a.p. joe biden has said he has never spoken to his son about his foreign business and nothing the republicans have put forth suggest otherwise, end quote. we'll see where it goes down the road. want to get to the other topic.
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we'll be paying money to countries along the world if it goes through the way they've outlined it. the big climate summit happened over the weekend. it concluded over the weekend. "wall street journal" says biden signs up for climate reparations, the latest shakedown is a fund to pay poor countries for supposed damage becauseed by western use of fossil fuels. the idea here, mark, is western european countries and united states would pool their money and give it to third world countries for hurricanes or typhoons or damage caused by climate change. this is not a done deal. i would argue it might be far from it. how do you see it now? >> if anyone owes poor countries anything is the climate extremist. we used cheap energy from fossil fuels and want to deny developing countries the chance
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to do the same thing. it will do far more damage to their prosperity than anything that climate change could possibly do. second of all the idea that western industrialization and the free enterprise system has done damage to developing countries is simply false. i can prove it. in 2018 there was a study which showed for the first time since agriculture based civilization began the majority of the woeshld's population was middle class or witch for the history of human kind the majority of people lived in poverty. we have a middle class majority population in the entire world. at that moment the climate activists want to deny people access to cheap, abundant energy. they would drive billions of people out of the middle class and top billions more from getting to the middle class. this would do more damage, the climate activists would do more damage to the gdp of these countries than any of the
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solutions they offer and so the war on fossil fuels is what is hurting the developing world, not anything else. >> bill: i mentioned the "wall street journal" piece. china emits 2/3 more co2 than europe and the u.s. combined. coal accounts for 60% of china's power generation and more new coal plants are set for approval through 2025 than the entire existing u.s. fleet. why don't we start there? marc, last word. >> sure. if china wants to give reparations let them do it. the idea that anyone is owed reparations. they are owed is access to abundant, cheap energy. that's what they are owed. they are owed -- this war on fossil fuels is what is damaging their countries. we have to stop the war on fossil fuels and help these people help the middle class grow in the world. we have a middle class majority for the first time in human history and the climate activists want to push people
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out of the middle class. >> bill: dane yachlt >> dana: the u.n. nuclear watchdog warning of potential disaster as europe's largest nuclear power plant was struck by shelling in ukraine yesterday. jack keane will join us with how dangerous the situation is. police ramping up security at synagogues after foiling plans to attack a jewish community in new york city. a live report on the measures being taken. >> officers arrested two suspects at penn station after one of the suspects was flagged by making anti-semitic and threatening posts online. it's called the newday 100 because it lets veterans borrow up to 100% of their home's value. not just 80% like some typical loans. that extra cash can make a huge difference in these times of skyrocketing prices. here's more good news: home values have skyrocketed too. that means even more cash!
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my name is joshua florence, and one thing i learned being a firefighter is plan ahead. you don't know what you're getting into, but at the end of the day, you know you have a team behind you that can help you. not having to worry about the future makes it possible to make the present as best as it can be for everybody. >> drop the gun, drop the gun, drop the gun! >> you can imagine at nighttime the sounds of that. off duty vermont sheriff's deputy shot by police in upstate new york. he refused an order to put down his gun.
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saratoga springs officials say the deputy got into an argument with three people. exchanged fire with one of them. they shot him 11 times for ignoring the order to drop the weapon. he is in the hospital listed in stable condition. he will survive in all likelihood. >> we're in contact with members of the jewish organizations and synagogues and others to let them know once again we understand the concerns, the fear. hate crime is real and the state of new york is taking every step possible to be in the business of preventing crimes and preventing instances and not just waiting to solve them in the after math. >> dana: kathy hochul after the nypd arrested two men this weekend and stopped a developing threat against the jewish community. alexis mcadams is following the story from new york city. >> very scary situation. a lot of new yorkers are on edge today. investigators say one of the suspect was armed with a large
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hunting knife wearing a swastika arm band when he was taken into custody. state police will ramp up monitoring in the jewish community. brown was arrested after he made threats against the new york city jewish community charged with making a terroristic threat. the 21-year-old brown and 22-year-old maier were taken into custody at penn station on friday. the threats weren't aimed at a specific synagogue. police believe they stopped a potential strategy. back at the new york city apartment investigators found an illegal gun. they went to pennsylvania to buy that gun. brown was tweeting anti-semitic threats like this saying you are going to ask a priest if i should become a husband and shoot up a synagogue and die. this time i'm really going to do it. brown told police he was running a white supremacist group online. >> this hate cannot be allowed
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to take hold and build and gain further ground. america must defeat the rising threat of domestic terrorism. it is real and it is here and we must have a formidable approach to it. >> according to the anti-defamation league anti-semitic incidents are on the rise. more than 2,000 incidents were reported in 2020 across the country. it was the third highest year on record since 1979. both suspects will be in court in new york later this week. we expect to see an increased presence at sensitive locations around new york city. >> dana: thank you for that update. >> bill: to the latest now. the war in ukraine continues. europe's largest nuclear power plant bore the brunt of more than a dozen blasts from over the weekend. russia and ukraine blaming each other for that. the u.n. nuclear watchdog chief issued this statement. explosions occurred at the site of this major nuclear power
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plant which is completely unacceptable. whoever is behind this must stop immediately. as i've said many times before you are playing with fire. want to bring in retired general jack keane senior strategic analyst and chairman for the institute for the study of war. how are you doing on a monday? let's bring our viewers up to date. what do you think is happening at this plant and is there any way to keep it secure when there is a war that's raging around it? >> let's bring our viewers up to date and remind them this nuclear power plant is the largest in europe. it has six nuclear reactors. none of those are active. but nonetheless there is nuclear fuel present there in and around all of those nuclear reactors. as such the power is needed to cool those nuclear reactors so they don't overheat. if you shut the power down, which has happened temporarily, then there is danger here that
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we could have a nuclear incident as a result of the fuel overheating. that is the problem in front of us and in front of the ukrainians. here what we have is russians and ukrainians accusing each other. ross adams, a state-owned enterprise is now running that plant. no longer the ukrainians. but while we don't have the evidence, bill, let's use some common sense here. the russians are conducting a comprehensive campaign of terror impacting the ukrainian people and shutting down energy sources. it is freezing in ukraine. people are without heat for many hours a day. children are not going to school because of the lack of power. they can't use their computers or iphones, either. for remote schooling. and there is suffering that's taking place in the major cities that are under attack. it fits the narrative that putin has certainly to do just that and take the risk of a potential
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nuclear incident because he knows it will hurt the ukrainian people and also hurt his drupes on the ground. conversely, zelensky and his troops have given up tens of thousands of their lives to do what? to protect the ukrainian people. it doesn't make a lot of sense that he would further endanger the ukrainian people by creating a nuclear incident. we may not have the facts supporting an allegation against russia, all the weight of the evidence leans towards them. >> dana: the other thing i wanted to ask you, we know the c.i.a. director burns had traveled and met with his russian counterpart and then met with zelensky trying to warn them both about the concern about the use of nuclear weapons. but this is an interesting thing because this is not necessarily the use of a tactical nuclear weapon, this is actually you could have a nuclear attack so to speak but because of the
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power plant. >> there is no doubt about it. of course, putin, you know, would charge the ukrainians with the responsibility for it. who since the war began on february 24th, he began it with a false narrative that the basis for the war is genocide being committed by the ukrainians against russian speaking people in the don bass region. a false narrative. he lies through his teeth to the world at large and to his own people. you are right. there is a huge potential danger here. what the head of the team for the iaea that has been on the ground has recommended and makes sense to set up a security zone around rzepczynski plant so no troops can enter there and be there and no fire would take
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place inside of that security zone. the russians haven't agreed the that. we're at a stalemate in terms of putting safety measures in place as well. >> bill: thank you, general. austin said over the weekend ukraine is better equipped and its army is fighting better than russia's is heading into winter. thank you for your time. >> dana: supreme court justice alito denying allegations he and his wife leaked an opinion on contraception in 2014. a major shake-up at the happiest place on earth. a familiar name coming back into the disney corporate suite. that's next. ♪ at newday usa we give veterans the va cash out loan with no upfront costs for an appraisal or termite inspection. no upfront costs at all. let us get your family security of cash in the bank.
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>> bill: supreme court justice alito denying allegations he or his wife leaked the 2014 burwell versus hobby lobby decision on contraception weeks before it was announced. mike, what's the story? >> good morning to you. justice alito denied an allegation from a former pro-life activist that a donor to his organization was told the outcome of a high profile case before it was announced. the hobby lobby case. he said the allegations that the writhes were told the outcome of the decision in the hobby lobby case or the authorship of the opinion of the court by me or my wife street completely false. a reverend says a donor relayed the information. he spent years as an activist in the pro-life movement and now
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says his views on abortion have shifted in recent years. the chairman of the subcommittee are responding saying the court needs to get its house in order and adopt a binding code of ethics just have the lower courts have and bring it in line with other branches government. after the blockbuster leak of alito's draft opinion of the roe v. wade and led to massive protests in front of the supreme court. a shocking breach of the high court's private and confidential deliberations. chief justice john roberts announced an investigation into the origins of the leak soon after the information was published in early may. so far any findings have not been released publicly. >> bill: story there. mike emanuel in washington. >> dana: stunning shake-up at disney, the company announced the return of bob iger as ceo less than a year into his
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retirement will replace shape chapek. he had a terrible year. >> including the fact making it more of a surprise that he signed a new three-year deal this past summer and although he meddled in disney's board of director decision didn't show a willingness to come back. what this is, dana, is the story of leadership. in this respect. chapek got into a tangle with ron desantis of florida. what he revealed and his weakness was in that it was disney became a place run by its employees and grievances and sensitivities. at first he sat out of the
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scrape in florida, but then the employees demanded you get in and take a stand. whether or not he wanted to in the beginning or whether or not he caved in the end, that reveals there is no leadership at the top. be careful. i think iger is a strong voice. i think iger will take a strong stand on whatever it is he believes. what he believes is really progressive values. that's what will drive disney's decisions. i believe iger would have stood up in florida. he would have stood up against ron desantis. he would be more the continued woke of disney. if you are a disney subscriber or fan or customer, be prepared they are telling you this is our vision of the future, strong, progressive voice. >> dana: interesting to see all that happen. senator mark warner of virginia, a democrat, has been on there for a looking time now and revealed he agrees with donald trump on something and that is in banning tiktok from the united states. watch him here. >> i think donald trump was right. tiktok is an enormous threat.
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if you are a parent and you have a kid on tiktok, i would be very, very concerned. all of that data that your child is inputting and receiving is being stored somewhere in beijing. >> the f.b.i. director said this last week. >> china's vast hacking program is the world's largest by the mile. they have stolen more of america's personal and business data more than any other nation combined. >> bill: the biden administration has to make decisions. what should they do? >> well, you know, dana, when it comes to this idea your phone is spying on you and stealing all the information. there are a lot of us that say i'm not doing anything bad and i need these apps. a big part of my life. what do i give up in terms of giving up my information? in an extended clip warner and donald trump are pointing out
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here is what you are giving up when it comes to tiktok. your 14-year-old's information to china. what value is that? how does it harm your family? here is how. help use the data to push other content suggested to your child. think how much time i give and everybody watching gives to raising your child. helping shape your worldview and principles and values. well, now china has all that data to push onto a generation, onto a culture, an entire society influence through the form of check out this next point of view and video. how do you think we get a generation of people are against the very american value of free speech? through cultural shifts. this points out we're handing over hours, how many hours a day are our children watching this stuff? hours of shaping american's worldview to the chinese. >> dana: remember just for everybody at home, china only allows people in china,
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especially kids, to look at tiktok for 40 minutes total in a day and also really control the content. so you get happy things or nice experiment things. it is not like what you are seeing in american tiktok. that debate rages on. will cain, we'll see you this weekend. thank you. >> bill: another awards show and big night for taylor swift. check it out. she won six american music awards and two free tickets to her next concert, kidding. her first public appearance since last week's drama over ticket sales and the news, however, is not so good for ticketmaster. updates on that as that story rolls on into another week, another month or more, right, dana? ♪
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>> i cannot express how unbelievable it is to me that i still get to do this and that you still care. thank you underlined with 13 exclamation points. i don't know what to say. i love you. >> dana: i'll allow those. taylor swift thanking fans at the american music awards. her first public appearance since last week's chaos. ticketmaster parent company live nation is now under investigation. >> ticketmaster is going on an apology term after the system meltdown that left many swift fans without tickets in their hands trying to fix bad blood between ticketmaster and the pop star and her fans. ticketmaster is explaining what caused the chaos. a combo of bot attacks and a lot of fans trying to get tickets leading to unprecedented traffic
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on their site. 3.5 billion requests, four times the previous peak for them. the platform says based on the volume of people that wanted tickets swift would need to perform over 900 stadium shows, a show every single night for the next 2 1/2 years for everyone who tried to see her live to get tickets. that might be too little too late to satisfy antitrust skeptics on capitol hill. a congressman who chairs the antitrust committee. the d.o.j. has a probe into the merger should break it up if they can't fix it with ticketmaster and live nation. >> dana: before we go we have something coming up. >> bill: swifty rolls on, right? it is looking like christmas. today at 5:00 the lighting of the fox all american christmas tree will happen outside fox square during "the five." everyone is invited to check it
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out. dana, what do you think of said tree as you see it now? >> dana: stunning. i'm impressed and it is wonderful that fox news is doing this. as you watch fox you can see it. if you're in new york city it is a great, beautiful beacon of hope for the season and fun on "the five." we have some surprises up our sleeves. sandra smith is here for "the faulkner focus." here she is. >> i'll see bill later this afternoon. fox news alert president biden keeping up with tradition and pardoning two turkeys as americans face sky high prices for thanksgiving staples. experts say it could be the most expensive thanksgiving in history. inflation is raging red hot. the meal could cost 20% more than just last year. the farm bureau snapshot puts the price tag for a feast of ten at $64
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